The man who first set out to build the house at 1780 South Circle U Lane in 2007 — 58-year-old Michael Ussery — was found guilty of 12 counts of bank fraud Friday following a week-long jury trial, according to a news release from the U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Missouri.

The bank fraud is not specifically linked to recent allegations surrounding the mansion — like rape accusations this summer and an international weapons investigation in 2014.

Prosecutors say Ussery got a $1.6 million construction loan from Mid-Missouri Bank in 2007 to go toward building the home.

Ussery was supposed to obtain an invoice and a lien waiver from contractors who worked on the home and submit those documents to Mid-Missouri Bank, the release says.

In the summer of 2007, Ussery submitted a dozen invoices and lien waivers to the bank totaling more than $315,000. Prosecutors say those documents were phony, and Ussery was instead using the money to conduct business for two companies that he owned — USS Properties and Villa Properties.

Ussery is subject to a sentence of up to 30 years in federal prison for each count of bank fraud, according to the release.

The release from prosecutors says Ussery eventually stopped construction on the Bois D'Arc property, and the bank foreclosed on the loan. The bank then sold the partially finished house and took a loss of more than $780,000, according to the release.

The Greene County Assessor's Office lists the current owner of the home in Bois D'Arc as James Bonis.

Sheriff Jim Arnott said Monday that investigation is still ongoing. Arnott said investigators are waiting on some forensic evidence to be processed at the crime lab.

Court documents say authorities also searched Bonis' residence in Bois D'Arc in 2014 as part of a weapons investigation.

Bonis was accused of importing rifle scopes from China, changing the engravings and selling them with labels that claimed they were made in the United States. Bonis pleaded guilty in April to federal charges of mail fraud and money laundering related to that scam.

Documents say the property at 1780 Circle U Lane includes a guest home, a 12-car garage, a protected courtyard, an elevator, a pool, a fountain and 13 acres of land.